Montana Woman Rescues Wandering Llama From Yellowstone Park

The llama ran off after guides loosened his halter because it irritated the spot of a previously abscessed tooth.

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) — A pack llama that escaped from a guided hike in southern Yellowstone National Park in August was rescued by a Montana outfitter last weekend, just days before most of the park’s entrances were to close for winter preparations.

“I just had to help him,” Susi Huelsmeyer-Sinay with Yellowstone Llamas in Bozeman, Montana, said Friday. “He was abandoned.”

“Ike slipped out of the halter completely,” Baty said, “because he’s sneaky, and he knows he can.”

It was the second time he’d escaped in the park, but the first foray was less than a couple of weeks in duration, Baty said.

After his August escape, the 12- to 15-year-old, 350-pound llama evaded capture attempts for about a month, including special treats and efforts to lure him in with other llamas.

“A lot of groups were looking for him,” said Beau Baty, who owns Wilderness Ridge with his wife. “Rangers were looking for him on their days off. It just pushed him deeper into the backcountry.”

They decided to wait until the weather drove Ike out of the backcountry.

In the meantime, park visitors reported seeing some strange wildlife. It was one of those reports that fellow Yellowstone concessionaire Hueslmeyer-Sinay heard about on Oct. 24.

“I contacted the park service and with the blessing of the park service I came to Yellowstone last Sunday to check out Ike and see if I could entice him to come home with me or to leave the park,” Hueslmeyer-Sinay told the Post Register of Idaho Falls.

She brought three llamas and headed to the last known sighting of Ike, near Lewis Lake, southwest of Yellowstone Lake.

“All of a sudden, there he was coming up and greeting the three llamas, who in turn greeted him,” she said. “These guys are herd animals. They need their own kind.”

She said she turned around with her llamas and Ike followed, eventually getting into a trailer with them for the trip back to Bozeman.

A burro and a llama graze on a two-acre plot of land at O'Hare Airport on August 13, 2013 in Chicago, Illinois. The animals are part of a herd of 25 goats, sheep, llamas and burros the airport is using to control about 120 acres of dense scrub vegetation thats difficult to maintain with traditional landscaping equipment. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)